xref: /titanic_41/usr/src/tools/depcheck/DependencyCheck.txt (revision d29b2c4438482eb00488be49a1f5d6835f455546)
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2CDDL HEADER START
3
4The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
5Common Development and Distribution License, Version 1.0 only
6(the "License").  You may not use this file except in compliance
7with the License.
8
9You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
10or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
11See the License for the specific language governing permissions
12and limitations under the License.
13
14When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
15file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
16If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
17fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
18information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
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20CDDL HEADER END
21
22Copyright 2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.  All rights reserved.
23Use is subject to license terms.
24
25ident	"%Z%%M%	%I%	%E% SMI"
26
27What does this tool do for you?
28
29This tool statically analyzes executable files and tries to figure out
30dependencies on libraries and other executable files.  It is important to
31recognize that the output of this tool may not be the definitive dependency
32list, but the output should give you pointers on possible dependencies.
33
34For more information on how this tool works, see "How does this tool work?"
35below.
36
37
38
39This set of tools contains 7 files:
40
41	1. DependencyCheck.txt - the file you are currently reading
42	2. make_pkg_db - generate database to reflect the software installed
43	3. SampleLinks - sample link resolution file for
44		/var/sadm/install/contents(see notes on make_pkg_db)
45	4. SamplePkgLinks - sample link resolution file for
46		a package pool (see notes on make_pkg_db)
47	5. get_depend_info - analyze executables, requires database files
48	6. make_pkg_db.txt - text formatted man page
49	7. get_depend_info.txt - text formatted man page
50
51
52
53
54How to use this tool:
55
56	a. run make_pkg_db with the -dbdir argument
57	b. read the README notes on make_pkg_db and decide if you
58	   want to resolve the symbolic links
59	c. run the get_depend_info tool and specify the directory with
60	   the package database files
61
62
63
64How does this tool work?
65
66At a high level, this tool uses /usr/bin/ldd and /usr/bin/strings to figure
67out what an executable file depends upon.  Since this is a static analysis
68there is no way to know if the dependencies identified will actually be
69executed.
70
71The strings command will not be run on binaries if the user specifies the
72-cons option for get_depend_info.
73
74This tool cannot resolve variable substitions.  For example if a shell script
75set "$MYPATH" to "/usr/sbin" and then executes "$MYPATH/df", this tool will
76not be able to resolve that the shell script will execute "/usr/sbin/df".
77
78The only way to conclusively know all the dependencies is to do a runtime
79analysis. Furthermore, to get the complete set of dependencies, you would need
80to run all permutations of the executable being analyzed.  Clearly a definitive
81dependency check would be a tremendous amount of work and outside the scope
82of this tool.
83
84This tool divides executables into three broad groups - kernel modules,
85binaries and shell scripts.
86
87For all three types of files, all the output is verified against the entries
88in database generated by make_pkg_db.  This technique allows the tool to verify
89that a dependency was part of the Solaris installation and determine which
90package a given dependency came from.
91
92
93
94A.  Dependency Checks on Kernel Modules
95
96Kernel modules are identified by having a "/kernel/" somewhere in their
97path.  If an input is identified as a kernel module, then an ldd is run on
98that module.  If the ldd returns output, then the tool parses that output
99to see if it can find the library in /kernel or in /usr/kernel.  For example,
100if the tool runs on /kernel/drv/mydrv, the ldd will return something like
101"misc/mylib".  The tool will look for "mylib"in /kernel/misc/mylib or
102/usr/kernel/misc/mylib.
103
104If the ldd returns nothing, then a "strings" command is run on the kernel
105module.  Again, the output of the strings is compared against /kernel and
106/usr/kernel to see if there is a match.  This method was designed to catch
107the "_depends_on" string embedded in some kernel modules.
108
109Note, if the ldd succeeds, then a strings will not run on the kernel module.
110
111
112B. Binary files
113
114Binary files have both the ldd and strings command run on them.  The output of
115both programs is parsed and checked against the contents of the database
116generated by make_pkg_db.
117
118If the user specifies the -cons option on get_depend_info, then the strings
119analysis will not be done.  This is a more conservative approach which only
120uses ldd and therefore has realiable output.
121
122
123C. Shell scripts
124
125Shell scripts are parsed to remove comments and break the script into tokens
126of the file.  All the tokens in the file are cross-checked against the database
127generated by make_pkg_db to determine if a dependency exists.
128
129
130